Akhaṇḍa-Ekādaśī Vrata and the Vaiṣṇava Protective Hymn; Prelude to the Kātyāyanī–Mahiṣāsura Narrative
यमस्य क्षिणे पार्श्वे पालाशो दक्षिणोत्तरे कृष्णोदुम्बरको रुद्राज्जातः क्षोमकरो वृषः
yamasya kṣiṇe pārśve pālāśo dakṣiṇottare kṛṣṇodumbarako rudrājjātaḥ kṣomakaro vṛṣaḥ
An Yamas linker Seite entstand der Palāśa-Baum; an der rechten (auf der Süd-Nord-Seite) der Kṛṣṇa-Udumbara. Aus Rudra wurde die Kṣomakara-Pflanze geboren, die Fasern für Leinen liefert, und auch der Stier (vṛṣa) trat hervor.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse encodes a Purāṇic ethic of sacralized ecology: trees and plants are not merely resources but are linked to divine powers, encouraging reverence, restraint, and ritual care toward the natural world.
Best classified under Sarga/Pratisarga-style cataloguing of manifested entities (a cosmological listing of beings/objects arising in the created order), rather than Vamśānucarita or Manvantara narrative.
Yama’s association with palāśa can signal rites connected with death/ancestral offerings, while Rudra as source indicates ascetic/transformative potency. The ‘vṛṣa’ motif also resonates with dharma (bull as emblem of dharma) and with Śaiva symbolism.